A board seat at a Federal Reserve Bank was associated with a 31% increase in the likelihood of receiving CPP funds, researchers found. (Shutter Stock)

(Newser)
–
Banks with ties to lawmakers were a lot likelier to get bailout cash than their less well-connected counterparts, according to a University of Michigan study unlikely to surprise bailout critics. Researchers crunching data on the 700 institutions that received TARP funds found that those with connections to members of congressional committees or execs who had served on Federal Reserve boards, fared better.

A connection to a member of a House finance committee was associated with a 26% increase in the likelihood of receiving funds from TARP's Capital Purchase Program. The effect of political influence was most apparent in the worst-performing banks, researchers found. The study also found that the amount of TARP cash companies received was strongly related to their spending on political donations and lobbyists.

Here's the new Democratic Party - Corporate Democrats. Here's the scam - use the people's and corporate money to get elected, then give the representation to the corporations. That's what's happening here - the corporations (health insurance, banks, brokers, etc.) own the government including the congress and the administration. Thanks, Rahm.

DanBaja

Dec 23, 2009 7:05 AM CST

And welcome to European style socialism, my friends on the left. The government will make everything fair to all.